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      Evolutionary Control of Infectious Disease: Prospects for Vectorborne and Waterborne Pathogens

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          Abstract

          Evolutionary theory may contribute to practical solutions for control of disease by identifying interventions that may cause pathogens to evolve to reduced virulence. Theory predicts, for example, that pathogens transmitted by water or arthropod vectors should evolve to relatively high levels of virulence because such pathogens can gain the evolutionary benefits of relatively high levels of host exploitation while paying little price from host illness. The entrance of Vibrio cholerae into South America in 1991 has generated a natural experiment that allows testing of this idea by determining whether geographic and temporal variations in toxigenicity correspond to variation in the potential for waterborne transmission. Preliminary studies show such correspondences: toxigenicity is negatively associated with access to uncontaminated water in Brazil; and in Chile, where the potential for waterborne transmission is particularly low, toxigenicity of strains declined between 1991 and 1998. In theory vector-proofing of houses should be similarly associated with benignity of vectorborne pathogens, such as the agents of dengue, malaria, and Chagas' disease. These preliminary studies draw attention to the need for definitive prospective experiments to determine whether interventions such as provisioning of uncontaminated water and vector-proofing of houses cause evolutionary reductions in virulence

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          Most cited references34

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          Dengue in the early febrile phase: viremia and antibody responses.

          A multicenter effort was begun in 1994 to characterize the pathophysiology of dengue using a study design that minimized patient selection bias by offering enrollment to all children with undifferentiated fever for <72 h. In the first year, 189 children were enrolled (age range, 8 months to 14 years). Thirty-two percent of these children had dengue infections (60 volunteers). The percentage of children with a secondary dengue infection was 93%, with only 4 (7%) having a primary dengue infection. The virus isolation rate from the plasma of children with dengue was 98%. Viremia correlated highly with temperature. All four dengue virus serotypes were isolated at both study sites. This study demonstrates that all four serotypes of dengue virus can cause dengue hemorrhagic fever, that all dengue patients as defined by serology experience viremia during the febrile phase, and that as fever subsides, so does viremia.
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            The evolution of virulence in parasites and pathogens: reconciliation between two competing hypotheses.

            According to conventional wisdom, parasites and pathogens should evolve reduced virulence to their hosts, because more virulent parasites and pathogens are more likely to drive their hosts, and themselves, to extinction. But this view has been criticized for its reliance on group selection. According to an alternative perspective, selection will favor whatever level of virulence maximizes the rate of increase of the parasite or pathogen. This optimum virulence depends on the functional relationship between a parasite or pathogen's transmissibility and its effect on host mortality, with selection often favoring an intermediate degree of virulence. The thesis of this paper is that models in which intermediate levels of virulence are favored lead quite naturally to the further conclusion that parasites and pathogens should-up to a point-become less virulent over time, once the feedbacks between ecological and evolutionary processes are incorporated into the analysis. As a consequence of successive adaptations by the parasite or pathogen, the density of susceptible hosts is reduced, thereby altering the balance between selective forces so as to favor reduced virulence. However, the evolutionarily stable strategy that is achieved is bounded away from complete avirulence. We conclude that models in which intermediate virulence is favored do not necessarily contradict the conventional wisdom in the long run; in fact, these models provide a simple mechanistic explanation for the evolution of reduced virulence.
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              Host-Parasite Relations, Vectors, and the Evolution of Disease Severity

              P Ewald (1983)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                mioc
                Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz
                Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz
                Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Ministério da Saúde (Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil )
                0074-0276
                1678-8060
                September 1998
                : 93
                : 5
                : 567-576
                Affiliations
                [01] orgnameAmherst College orgdiv1 Department of Biology
                [02] orgnameUniversity Michigan School of Medicine orgdiv1 Laboratory of Animal Medicine
                [03] orgname orgdiv1 Departamento de Bioquímica e Biologia Molecular
                [05] orgnameInstituto de Salud Publica orgdiv1 Sub Departamento de Microbiologia Clinica
                [06] orgnameNew York Medical College orgdiv1 Department of Immunology
                [04] orgnameInstituto Oswaldo Cruz orgdiv1 Departamento de Genética
                Article
                S0074-02761998000500002 S0074-0276(98)09300502
                10.1590/S0074-02761998000500002
                83b9824f-a470-4f6c-a8ee-9f9d67da009c

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 30 July 1998
                : 15 June 1998
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 33, Pages: 10
                Product

                SciELO Brazil

                Categories
                Plenary Lectures

                pathogens,waterborne transmission,infectious diseases,control

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